Hurricane Arthur Latest: Which Parts of US will Be Worst Affected by 4 July Storms?

Hurricane Arthur expected to hit parts of USA over Independence Day weekendNHC

Parts of the US are bracing for an extremely wet and windy Independence Day as Hurricane Arthur strengthens into a hurricane.

Arthur is currently centred over the Bahamas and the National Hurricane Centre has issued a Hurricane Watch for Bogue Inlet to Oregon Inlet, North Carolina and Pamlico Sound.

Heavy rain is expected to affect the coastline of these areas over the next few days, including 4 July. The NHC confirmed Arthur had become a hurricane today (3 July).

"Arthur is now a hurricane ... expected to move near the North Carolina outer banks tonight," it said.

Explaining where the hurricane will hit, Nasa said: "In addition, a Tropical Storm Watch is in effect for the east coast of Florida from Sebastian Inlet to Flagler Beach, South Santee River South Carolina to south of Bogue Inlet, North Carolina, north of Oregon Inlet, North Carolina to the North Carolina/Virginia Border, and the Eastern Albemarle Sound."

The space agency's satellite showed that there is currently very heavy rainfall around Arthur's centre, with the heaviest rate seeing two inches per hour. It also showed powerful thunderstorms reaching heights of 15.5km/h and sustained winds of about 75km/h.

Nasa satellite showing Arthur over the Bahamas.Nasa

At present, Arthur is about 160km east-northeast of Cape Canaveral in Florida. It is 445km south of Charleston, South Carolina, 545km southwest of Cape Hatteras in North Carolina and 305km from Cape Fear.

Arthur was moving north at a speed of about 9km/h and turned northeast last night (2 July).

The NHC reported last night "that Arthur is expected to move east of the east-central coast of Florida today, July 2, pass east of Northeastern Florida tonight, move parallel to the coast of South Carolina on Thursday July 3, and approach the hurricane watch area Thursday night."